Brutal Honesty Over Hype Since 2008
Most entrepreneurs running multiple ventures face a structural problem: how do you maintain liability separation between your operations without paying formation and maintenance costs for each individual entity? In 19 states, the answer is the series LLC. In California, there is no answer. The state simply does not recognize the structure.
This is not a minor technical gap. It is a meaningful competitive disadvantage that costs California-based entrepreneurs real money — specifically, the $800 annual franchise tax multiplied by however many separate LLCs they need to maintain liability separation that a series LLC would provide in a single filing.
What a Series LLC Is
A series LLC is a master LLC containing distinct “cells” or “series” — each operating as a legally separate entity with its own assets, liabilities, members, and purposes, but all under the umbrella of a single organizational document. The liability protection works in both directions: creditors of one series cannot reach the assets of another series or the master LLC, and creditors of the master cannot reach series assets.
The practical applications are significant. A real estate investor with five properties can hold each in a separate series — five distinct liability shields — for the cost of a single LLC formation and a single annual tax. An entrepreneur running three unrelated businesses can protect each from the liabilities of the others without three separate formations, three registered agents, three operating agreements, and three $800 franchise tax payments. Delaware adopted series LLC legislation in 1996. Texas, Illinois, Nevada, Wyoming, and sixteen other states have followed. California has not.
The Cost Arithmetic
Consider a California real estate entrepreneur holding five properties for liability protection. In Texas, they form one series LLC, pay one formation fee, and maintain one annual filing. In California, they form five separate LLCs, pay five formation fees, and pay $4,000 per year in franchise taxes — indefinitely. The differential, compounded over ten years, is $40,000 in franchise taxes alone, before formation costs, separate operating agreements, separate registered agents, and the administrative burden of maintaining five separate legal entities.
For entrepreneurs with more complex structures — a holding company, multiple operating companies, and investment vehicles — the California premium over a series LLC state becomes genuinely significant at the level of entity overhead.
The California Workaround and Its Limits
Some California practitioners use a Delaware series LLC as the master entity, with California operations at the series level. This approach has not been definitively validated by California courts or the FTB. More damaging: the FTB has taken the position that each series is a separate entity for California tax purposes — meaning the $800 franchise tax potentially applies per series, largely eliminating the tax benefit of the series structure even for out-of-state formations. The workaround is not much of a workaround.
Why California Has Not Adopted the Series LLC
The honest answer is legislative inertia and creditor lobby influence. Series LLCs create liability compartmentalization that is more difficult for creditors to pierce — including the state as a creditor for tax purposes. The FTB’s interest in maximum revenue from each entity is not served by a structure that might be argued to constitute a single taxpayer. There are also genuine questions about how series LLCs interact with federal bankruptcy law. These are legitimate policy concerns — but other states have resolved them through thoughtful statutory design, and California has not. The result is that California entrepreneurs pay a premium for liability separation that is available more cheaply in competing jurisdictions.
The Practical Takeaway
If you are a California-based entrepreneur running multiple ventures or holding multiple assets, the state’s refusal to recognize series LLCs is a structural cost that belongs in your financial model. Structure your entities deliberately, minimize unnecessary entities where liability separation is not genuinely required, and factor the California entity premium into every business plan that involves multiple operating structures. The market has moved toward flexible structures. California has not followed, and entrepreneurs pay the difference.
— The Hedge | Brutal Honesty Over Hype Since 2008